System for detecting inoperative inkjets in printheads ejecting clear ink using thermal substrates
09694574 ยท 2017-07-04
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41J2/04585
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/2114
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/14153
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/393
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J29/393
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/16579
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/2142
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2029/3935
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/125
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/04535
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41J2/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J29/393
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C67/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/125
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/165
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An apparatus detects inoperative inkjets during printing. The apparatus operates the printhead or printheads in the printer to form test pattern on a thermal substrate. The heat of the materials used to form the test pattern increase the optical density of the areas where the materials land. The area where the test pattern is formed is imaged and the image data are analyzed to identify inoperative inkjets.
Claims
1. A printer comprising: a printhead configured with a plurality of inkjets to eject material; a supply of thermal substrate having a surface that is coated with a heat sensitive dye that increases in optical density in response to heat contained within the material ejected from the printhead onto the thermal substrate, the optical density increase occurring with reference to a known function of optical density per unit of heat energy input to the heat sensitive dye on the thermal substrate; an optical sensor configured to generate electrical signals corresponding to optical densities at a plurality of locations on the thermal substrate; an actuator operatively connected to the optical sensor to move the optical sensor to a position opposite the thermal substrate onto which material has been ejected; and a controller operatively connected to the actuator, the optical sensor, and the printhead, the controller being configured to operate the printhead to eject a predetermined number of material drops from each inkjet onto the surface of the thermal substrate having the heat sensitive dye to enable the predetermined number of material drops to form a test dot for each inkjet that ejected material onto the thermal substrate and increase the optical density at each location in the plurality of locations on the thermal substrate at which each test dot was formed, to operate the actuator to move the optical sensor to a position opposite the thermal substrate, and to identify inoperative inkjets in the printhead with reference to the data received from the optical sensor that corresponds to the optical densities at the plurality of locations on the thermal substrate.
2. The printer of claim 1, the supply of thermal substrate further comprising: a plurality of thermal substrates, each substrate having the surface with the heat sensitive dye; and the controller is further configured to operate an actuator to move a single thermal substrate from the plurality of thermal substrates onto a support member at the position opposite the printhead.
3. The printer of claim 2 further comprising: a pivot for the support member to enable the support member to rotate; an actuator operatively connected to the support member and the controller; and the controller being further configured to operate the actuator to rotate the support member about the pivot to enable a thermal substrate to drop from the support member.
4. The printer of claim 3 further comprising: a collection tray positioned to receive thermal substrates dropping from the support member.
5. The printer of claim 4 wherein the collection tray is configured for removal from and reinstallation in the printer to enable removal of the thermal substrates from the collection tray.
6. The printer of claim 1, the supply of thermal substrate further comprising: a first roller, the supply of thermal substrate having the surface with the heat sensitive dye being wound in a roll mounted about the first roller; a second roller to which a loose end of the supply of thermal substrate is attached to enable thermal substrate to be transferred from the first roller by rotation of the second roller; an actuator operatively connected to the second roller and the controller, the actuator being configured to rotate the second roller; and the controller being further configured to operate the actuator operatively connected to the second roller to rotate the second roller to pull thermal substrate from the supply of thermal substrate mounted about the first roller.
7. The printer of claim 6, the controller being further configured to detect the supply of thermal substrate mounted about the first roller being exhausted and to generate a signal indicative of the supply of thermal substrate being exhausted to enable the thermal substrate wound on the second roller to be removed and another supply of thermal substrate to be mounted about the first roller.
8. The printer of claim 1, the controller being further configured to operate the actuator to move the optical sensor away from the position opposite the thermal substrate.
9. The printer of claim 1, the controller being further configured to identify inkjets that do not eject material drops of a predetermined size with reference to the data corresponding to the optical densities of the thermal substrate.
10. The printer of claim 1 wherein the printhead is configured to eject drops of build material to form three-dimensional objects and to cause the thermal sensitive dye to increase optical density at locations on the surface of the thermal surface where the drops of build material land on the heat sensitive dye.
11. An apparatus comprising: a supply of thermal substrate having a surface that is coated with a heat sensitive dye that increases in optical density in response to heat contained within the material ejected from the printhead onto the thermal substrate, the optical density increase occurring with reference to a known function of optical density per unit of heat energy input to the heat sensitive dye on the thermal substrate; an optical sensor configured to generate electrical signals data corresponding to optical densities at a plurality of locations on the thermal substrate; an actuator operatively connected to the optical sensor to move the optical sensor to a position opposite the thermal substrate onto which material has been ejected; and a controller operatively connected to the actuator, the optical sensor, and the printhead, the controller being configured to operate the printhead to eject a predetermined number of material drops from each inkjet onto the surface of the thermal substrate having the heat sensitive dye to enable the predetermined number of material drops to form a test dot for each inkjet on the thermal substrate and increase an optical density at each location in the plurality of locations on the thermal substrate at which each test dot was formed, to operate the actuator to move the optical sensor to a position opposite the thermal substrate, and to identify inoperative inkjets in the printhead with reference to the data received from the optical sensor that corresponds to optical densities at the plurality of locations on the thermal substrate.
12. The apparatus of claim 11, the supply of thermal substrate further comprising: a plurality of thermal substrates, each thermal substrate having the surface with the heat sensitive dye; and the controller is further configured to operate an actuator to move a single thermal substrate from the plurality of thermal substrates onto a support member at the position opposite the printhead.
13. The apparatus of claim 12 further comprising: a pivot for the support member to enable the support member to rotate; an actuator operatively connected to the support member and the controller; and the controller being further configured to operate the actuator to rotate the support member about the pivot to enable a thermal substrate to drop from the support member.
14. The apparatus of claim 13 further comprising: a collection tray positioned to receive thermal substrates dropping from the support member.
15. The apparatus of claim 14 wherein the collection tray is configured for removal from and reinstallation in the printer to enable removal of the thermal substrates from the collection tray.
16. The apparatus of claim 11, the supply of thermal substrate further comprising: a first roller, the supply of thermal substrate having the surface with the heat sensitive dye being wound in a roll mounted about the first roller; a second roller to which a loose end of the supply of thermal substrate is attached to enable thermal substrate to be transferred from the first roller by rotation of the second roller; an actuator operatively connected to the second roller and the controller, the actuator being configured to rotate the second roller; and the controller being further configured to operate the actuator operatively connected to the second roller to rotate the second roller to pull thermal substrate from the supply of thermal substrate mounted about the first roller.
17. The apparatus of claim 16, the controller being further configured to detect the supply of thermal substrate mounted about the first roller being exhausted and to generate a signal indicative of the supply of thermal substrate being exhausted to enable the thermal substrate wound on the second roller to be removed and another supply of thermal substrate to be mounted about the first roller.
18. The apparatus of claim 11, the controller being further configured to operate the actuator to move the optical sensor away from the position opposite the thermal substrate.
19. The apparatus of claim 11, the controller being further configured to identify inkjets that do not eject material drops of a predetermined size with reference to the data corresponding to the optical densities of the thermal substrate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The foregoing aspects and other features of an apparatus or printer that detects inoperative inkjets during three-dimensional printing are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) For a general understanding of the environment for the device disclosed herein as well as the details for the device, reference is made to the drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals designate like elements.
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(12) The controller 46 is also operatively connected to at least one and possibly more actuators 42 to control movement of the planar support member 34, the columnar support member 38, and the printheads 22, 26 relative to one another. That is, one or more actuators can be operatively connected to structure supporting the printheads to move the printheads in a process direction and a cross-process direction with reference to the surface of the planar support member. Alternatively, one or more actuators can be operatively connected to the planar support member 34 to move the surface on which the part is being produced in the process and cross-process directions in the plane of the planar support member 34. As used herein, the term process direction refers to movement along one axis in the surface of the planar support member 34 and cross-process direction refers to movement along an axis in the planar support member surface that is orthogonal to the process direction axis in that surface. These directions are denoted with the letters P and C-P in
(13) A three-dimensional object printer having a housing is shown in
(14) The area 112 outlined in dashes in
(15) One embodiment of a module that detects inoperative inkjets during object printing is shown in the block diagram of
(16) The thermal substrates 332 in the substrate supply 308 are planar members made of a substance that supports the build material and the support material ejected from the printhead 86, such as paper, which is coated with a heat sensitive dye that changes color in response to exposure to heat contained within the build material or support material. These dyes increase in optical density with reference to a known function of optical density per unit of heat energy input to the substance of the thermal substrate.
(17) The substrate supply 308 includes a lifting mechanism 336 that lifts the thermal substrates 332 as a pushing mechanism 340 removes a single substrate from the supply and positions it onto the support member 312. The lifting mechanism 336 can be a spring-loaded mechanism, an air spring, a mechanically actuated jack, or the like. The pushing mechanism 340 can be a solenoid or the like. The guide rail that supports the optical sensor 304 is operatively connected to one of the actuators 316 to move the guide rail 328 and the optical sensor 304 between the position over the substrate supply 308 and the position over the support member 312 in a reciprocating manner between the two positions. When the guide rail 328 and the sensor 304 are over the substrate supply 308, the printhead 86 can be moved above a thermal substrate 332 on the support member 312 to enable printing of a test pattern on the substrate. The heat energy of the build material and support material on the substrate increases the optical density of the thermal substrate at the point of impact and the immediately surrounding area. The extent of the optical density spread corresponds to the amount of heat energy carried by the material mass ejected by the inkjets. When the guide rail 328 and the sensor 304 are over the support member 312, the sensor 304 is moved along the guide rail 328 to enable generation of image data of the test pattern on the thermal substrate 332.
(18) A method of operating a printer that produces three-dimensional objects is shown in
(19) At predetermined times in the printing operation, the controller 108 (
(20) In another embodiment shown in
(21) A method of operating a printer that produces three-dimensional objects is shown in
(22) At predetermined times in the printing operation, the controller 108 (
(23) While the embodiments discussed above are within a printer that forms three-dimensional objects, thermal substrates and the system that detects inoperative inkjets from the changes in optical density on such substrates can be used in two dimensional document printing systems, particularly those that use clear inks. Thus, as used in this document, the word material refers to substances that can be used to form three dimensional objects as well as inks used in document printing. In such systems, a second supply of thermal substrates can be maintained and, from time to time, printed with a test pattern that is analyzed to identify inoperative inkjets. Likewise, printheads ejecting clear ink onto a moving web or an imaging member, such as a drum, can be moved opposite a thermal substrate, either in sheet form or from a roll supply, for printing and detection of inoperative inkjets.
(24) It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems, applications or methods. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art that are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.